Ted Gunderson
Ted Gunderson | |
---|---|
Ted Gunderson in his FBI Office | |
Born |
Theodore L. Gunderson November 7, 1928 Colorado Springs, Colorado |
Died |
July 31, 2011 82) Memphis, Tennessee | (aged
Cause of death | Cancer |
Occupation | Retired FBI Senior Special Agent In Charge, private investigator, speaker, author, researcher. |
Employer | Federal Bureau of Investigation(ret), private clients |
Title | Senior Special Agent in Charge, Los Angeles, Special Agent in Charge, Dallas, TX, Memphis, TN, Washington, D.C. offices, F.B.I. |
Theodore L. Gunderson (November 7, 1928 - July 31, 2011[1] was an American Federal Bureau of Investigation Special Agent In Charge and head of the Los Angeles FBI. He was most famous for handling the Marilyn Monroe and the John F. Kennedy cases.[2][3] He was the author of the best selling book How to Locate Anyone Anywhere.[4]
Early life and FBI
Ted Gunderson was born in Colorado Springs. He graduated from the University of Nebraska in 1950. Gunderson joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation in December 1951 under J. Edgar Hoover. He served in the Mobile, Knoxville, New York City, and Albuquerque offices. He held posts as an Assistant Special Agent-in-Charge in New Haven and Philadelphia. In 1973 he became the head of the Memphis FBI and then the head of the Dallas FBI in 1975.[5] Ted Gunderson was appointed the head of the Los Angeles FBI in 1977.[6] In 1979 he was one of a handful interviewed for the job of FBI director, which ultimately went to William H. Webster.[7]
Post-FBI
After retiring from the FBI, Gunderson set up a private investigation firm, Ted L. Gunderson and Associates, in Santa Monica. In 1980, he became a defense investigator for Green Beret Doctor Jeffrey R. MacDonald, who had been convicted of the 1970 murders of his pregnant wife and two daughters. Gunderson obtained affidavits from Helena Stoeckley confessing to her involvement in the murders.[8]
He also investigated a child molestation trial in Manhattan Beach California. In a 1995 conference in Dallas, Gunderson warned about the proliferation of secret Satanic groups, and the danger posed by the New World Order, a shadow government that would be controlling the US government.[9] He also claimed that a "slave auction" in which children were sold to men in turbans had been held in Las Vegas, that four thousand ritual human sacrifices are performed in New York City every year, and that the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City was carried out by the US government.[9] Gunderson believed that in the US there is a secret widespread network of groups who kidnap children and infants, and subject them to Satanic ritual abuse and subsequent human sacrifice.[10][11]
Gunderson was a member of the Constitution Party.
He died on July 31, 2011 from cancer.[8]
References
- ↑ Former Memphis FBI Chief Dies
- ↑ Associated, The (2011-08-19). "Former Memphis FBI chief Gunderson dies". UTSanDiego.com. Retrieved 2012-09-13.
- ↑ Society of Former Special Agents of the FBI. Turner Publishing Co. 1999. pp. 150–151.
- ↑ How to Locate Anyone Anywhere Without Leaving Home. Dutton, 1989. ISBN 0-525-24746-7 http://www.amazon.com/How-Locate-Anyone-Anywhere-Without/dp/0452277426
- ↑ "The Dallas Division, Office Locations and Special Agents in Charge".
- ↑ Daniel Schorn (November 6, 2005). "Jeffrey MacDonald: Time For Truth". CBS News, 48 Hours. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
- ↑ January 2, 1983, The Dallas Morning News
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 "Around the Nation; Investigation Reopened In Doctor's Murder Case". Associated Press International. 1982-04-17. Retrieved 2008-08-21.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Evan Harrington (September 1996). "Conspiracy Theories and Paranoia: Notes From a Mind-Control Conference". Skeptical Inquirer. Retrieved 2012-04-29. Examples of videos made by Gunderson in his late years: "Former FBI Chief Ted Gunderson Says Chemtrail Death Dumps Must Be Stopped" supporting chemtrail conspiracy theory. Also "9/11 Inside Job, says FBI Special Agent in Charge Ted Gunderson", supporting 9/11 conspiracy theories
- ↑ Philip Jinkins (July 2008), "Chapter 10: Satanism and Ritual Abuse", in James R. Lewis, The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements, Oxford University Press, pp. 222, 241, doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195369649.001.0001, ISBN 9780195369649 (registration required)
- ↑ Philip Jenkins and Daniel Maier-Katkin (1992) (2006), "Satanism: myth and reality in a contemporary moral panic", in Chas Critcher, Critical Readings: Moral Panics and the Media, Open University Press, pp. 90–91, 93, ISBN 978-0335218073 (registration required)
External links
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